The Wonderful Large Wild Man

The Wonderful Large Wild Man

Students analyse written, visual and digital texts and respond by composing a range of texts, including a ballad, doggerel verse, list poem and broadsheet, for different purposes.

Stimulus #1:

The Wonderful Large Wild Man (ca 1790s), unknown author

Text type

Informative: Students draw an illustration of The Wonderful Large Wild Man from its description

Imaginative: Students compose a ballad about The Wonderful Large Wild Man

Imaginative: Students compose a doggerel verse about The Wonderful Large Wild Man

Imaginative: Students compose a broadside about a creature from Indigenous cultures and traditions

Imaginative: Students compose a simile list poem about The Wonderful Large Wild Man

Background notes for teachers

The Wonderful Large Wild Man is a broadside (a large sheet of paper printed on one side – see below for more information on broadsides) made up of two woodcuts. The left-hand image is of three buildings by the water, and is probably supposed to represent Botany Bay. The right hand image is of a monster guarded by two men with guns. It matches closely the description of the wild man given in the letterpress of the broadside, and was probably cut especially for the broadside.

The broadside describes the capture of the giant creature, by the crew of the Ship Rover, under Captain Lee. There is no evidence that a ship Rover visited Australia in 1789.

Full transcript of the broadside

“A description of a wonderful large WILD MAN or monstrous giant BROUGHT FROM BOTANY-BAY

This surprising monstrous Giant was taken by a crew of English Sailors when they went on shore to furnish themselves with fresh water at Botany-Bay. To their surprise they beheld at a distance three of the most surprising tallest and biggest looking naked men that have been seen in the memory of this age, turning towards them, which much affrighted the sailors, caused them to make expedition on board the ship for the safety of their lives, leaving the casks of water and a quantity of good old rum which they had in a cag to refresh themselves and make merry, when the three savages got to the sea-side they started at the ship for a long time with wonder and admiration, one of them having got the cag of rum, he tasted, spit it out and shook his head, another did the same, but the third drank plentifully and began to jump about in a frightful wild manner, shouting and making a hideous noise, the other two Giants went off and left this one enjoying the cag of rum, who drank to such excess that he dropped on the ground and lay as if dead the sailors went on shore well armed and found this monstrous body motionless they bound him fast with ropes and with much fatigue got him on board the ship, where they secured him with iron chains, where he slept upwards of 24 hours before he was awake and was kept chained during the passage, he shewed not the least token of illness at sea, he came in the ship Rover, the capt. Lee to England from Botany-Bay, and landed at Plymouth, November 29, 1789.

Ladies and gentleman in great numbers honoured him with their company, and has been seen by thousands of people, and all acknowledge him to be the greatest curiosity ever seen in England by the oldest man living, he being such a monstrous overgrown size, and being the first ever brought from that country captain Lee determined to bring him to London: he is much tamer and not to savage in temper as might be expected. He is 9 feet 7 inches high, 4 feet 10 inches broad, a remarkable large heard, broad face, frightful eyes, a broad nose and thick lips like a black, very broad teeth, heavy eye-brows, hair stronger than a horse’s mane, body and limbs covered with strong black hair, the nails of his fingers and toes may be properly called talons, crookt like a hawk’s bill, and as hard as horn, in short he is viewed with admiration and astonishment on account of his huge size.

He is allowed to be the greatest curiosity in England being the largest man in the known world, though some say there is larger in New Holland. He resembles a black, but his skin is yellow. The sailors who brought him over say when they took him he was curiously painted with red. There are red, green and blue mines where he came from, and delight in painting their skin. The captain says that before he got this wild savage into custody he took a close view of them with a spying glass from the ship, and of the other two giants that were with him which he though were his sons, for they looked young and had little or no beard, and variety of red circles and spots and screapes on their bodies and limbs which hey seemed to admire. This giant is very wild and seems to know nothing of Christianity he has offered to shew many fits of violence, but is fond of his keeper, and is more calm in his temper. He is chained round the middle, but has liberty to lie down, and rise and sit, and walks some yards when he chuses. They take great pains to instruct him in the English tongue, and it is hoped that he will be made to talk and become a Christian. He will sometime go willingly, eat human flesh if he can get it, but now seems to alter his mind, he was a long timed muzzled- this is a full description.”

Conversions

9 feet 7 inches = 2.9 metres

4 feet 10 inches = 1.5 metres

The average height of men entering the army in this period was about 1.65 metres so the Wild Man was supposedly about 1.3 metres taller than most men in Great Britain at the time!

Glossary

cag: a keg or small wooden barrel

affrighted: frightened

rum: an alcoholic drink or spirit commonly found on sailing ships

fatigue: exhaustion or tiredness

shewed: showed

expedition: a trip or voyage

New Holland: Australia was originally known as New Holland. From 1788 the term was used to describe the areas that had not yet been colonised. The colonised areas were known as New South Wales. Australia was not adopted as the official name until 1824.

crookt: crooked, bent or not straight

screapes: scrapes

spying glass: a small telescope or device for looking at object some distance away

chuses: chooses

muzzled: a device fitted over the mouth of a person or animal to stop them from biting or eating

More about broadsides

The Wonderful Large Wild Man is printed as a broadside. It features two wood block illustrations that were probably designed especially for this publication.

A broadside is a large sheet of paper usually printed on one side only.

Historically, broadsides were posters that announced news, events or proclamations by the government. Other broadsides were simply advertisements. They were one of most common forms of printed documents created in Great Britain, Ireland and North America between the 1500s and the 1800s. Broadsides were also a common method of printing the lyrics of ballads and other popular songs.

Today broadsides are much less common and are often created by artists with the intention of them being framed as artworks to be hung on walls or collected. Poets often publish small collections of their writing as broadsides.

Broadsides are what many museums and libraries label as ephemera. Ephemera are documents designed for a specific purpose that are then intended to be thrown away. Contemporary examples of ephemera might include junk mail or posters advertising films or concert tours by bands that are pasted on walls or telegraph poles.

One place broadsides were commonly sold in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were at public executions. People attending an execution could buy a broadside that might be illustrated with a rough picture of the crime or a portrait of the unhappy criminal. Other broadsides featured a wood cut of the method of execution, such as hanging. They often included a gory account of the crime, the trial and perhaps of the criminal’s confession of guilt.

A common feature of the broadsides sold at public executions was an example of doggerel verse or a roughly written poem. This poem usually warned the audience not to follow the unhappy criminal’s example in case they then also risked being put to death.

The Wonderful Large Wild Man is a broadside that features a long narrative about the capture of the giant creature, by the crew of the Ship Rover, under Captain Lee. The text of the story is printed beneath two wood block pictures. The broadside claims the Rover landed at the port of Plymouth in England on 29 November 1789.

However there is no evidence that a ship called the Rover ever travelled to Australia so this may just be a sensational story that was designed to sell broadsides to people eager to hear strange and wonderful stories about the very recent colonisation of Australia by Europeans.

The Library has a large collection of broadsides that are proclamations from the early days of the colony of New South Wales.

The proclamations include orders from the Governor on the conditions of employment for assigned convicts who worked for free settlers. This included expectations of how the convicts should be paid, fed and clothed.

apply increasing knowledge of vocabulary, text structures and language features to understand the content of texts

Respond to and compose texts

respond to and compose imaginative, informative and persuasive texts for different audiences, purposes and contexts for understanding, interpretation, critical analysis, imaginative expression and pleasure